TOM GRIEVE, who served as the Rangers' GM from 1984-1994,
has joined Home Sports Entertainment's Rangers announcing team
(HSE)....JOHN O'NEILL has been named National Sales Manager for
PRISM/SportsChannel Philadelphia....SportsChannel Chicago has
hired JIM REDDAN as Dir of Planning and Admin, and LISA ANN
MIKOLAI as Dir of Communications (GOULD MEDIA
SERVICES)....Orioles' PR Dir CHARLES STEINBERG has accepted a job
as VP for Public Affairs with the Padres (Baltimore SUN,
2/13)....ANDREI MEDVEDEV has been appointed 1995 Chairman of
IBM/ATP Tour Charities by the ATP tour Player Council (ATP).

Rick Welts is the President of NBA Properties, the league's
marketing and merchandising arm. He spoke with THE SPORTS
BUSINESS DAILY last week on what All-Star Weekend means to the
league. TOMORROW: The NBA's plans to expand into new markets
and its strategies for taking advantage of emerging technologies.
THE DAILY: What is new about 1995's All-Star game.
WELTS: Every year I get back and say, "That's it. We'll be
lucky to survive it at this level for another year." And every
year we seem to take it up a notch. We have had a very difficult
time in that, unlike some of the other sports, we have 18,000
seats that we could sell about 30 times if we had the opportunity
to get everybody in the building who wanted to be there. In some
ways our most difficult task is trying to say, "No." The
international component for us is really important, and didn't
exist as much as five or six years ago. ... And for us, this is a
key sponsorship event. But everyone we do business with, even if
they aren't a sponsor of a particular event going on there, is
using the All-Star Weekend to entertain their key customers and
clients and to meet with us.
THE DAILY: Is the value of the All-Star Game to present
individual stars or to be the showcase for the league, as a
whole?
WELTS: I wouldn't see the difference between those two.
Maybe somebody else in another sport might. But for us this has
been the showcase for the greatest players. And so many things
flow from that. The only controversy we have is not the players
who don't want to come, it's which players were not selected to
be there. And that's great.
THE DAILY: Is the Jam Session a way the league can promote
itself in emerging markets?
WELTS: We are looking at that as a way to extend our NBA
presence in other markets, but not the only way. Judd Perkins'
new position as President of NBA Events & Attractions puts a
person behind our vision of non-basketball entertainment
opportunities we want to pursue. .... We need to be out there in
other ways. Perhaps Jam Session is the best answer, but I'm not
sure there aren't others. We could be Disney on Ice, we could be
restaurants, a retail presence -- a lot of things that don't
involve playing basketball games.